In Pittacus Lore s The Rise of Nine, third in the New York Times bestselling I Am Number Four series, the stakes are higher than ever as John, Six, and Seven try desperately to find the rest of the Garde before it s too late.

This is an introductory economics textbook which has been crafted to meet the needs of business studies and management students. Developed using Introduction to Positive Economics as a starting point, the authors have carefully selected essential material, added new coverage, and taken the opportunity to make the text clearer.

These book cover mock-ups were created as professional time-savers to quickly help showcase a promoted book, show an ebook as a tangible asset, or display a book cover design, offering a wide range of display options.

Pagin' the Ragin' Cajun! When Storm is reverted to a teenage mutant thief, she's rescued by fellow felon Gambit in his first appearance! But befriending even one X-Man means making enemies like the Shadow King, Orphan-Maker, and the Hounds! After joining the X-Men himself, Gambit romances fellow southern-born super hero Rogue, but how can a thief steal a power-taker's heart when his assassin bride is back from the dead? Plus: Wolverine, Mystique, and more! Collects Uncanny X-Men #265-267 and Gambit #1-4.

Now in paperback, Batman: The Complete History offers a comprehensive overview of the Dark Knight's dark past. Best-selling author Les Daniels covers the gamut - from Batman's creation and runaway success, to the 1954 accusations of Batman and Robin's homosexuality, to the campy antics of the Adam West TV show, and the emergence of Frank Miller's very disturbed and very dark Knight. Illustrated with archival comic book art and rare Batman paraphernalia and designed by Batman's biggest fan, Chip Kidd, this history aims to please the core fans, while converting even more. --

was a trade paperback (TPB) published by Marvel in June 2002 collecting the stories originally published in 2001 single-issue comics magazine form as . Daredevil: Yellow presented another take on Daredevil's origins using letters written to Karen Page after her death as a narrative device. Here Page believes she is in love with both Daredevil and Murdock, and Nelson with Karen Page, resulting in a silent rivalry between the two men. The supervillains the Owl and the Purple Man are the antagonists. Daredevil credits Page with coining the phrase "The Man without Fear", and she also suggest to Daredevil he wear red instead of black and yellow. Daredevil's original costume, allegedly designed by Jack Kirby himself, was actually red, black and yellow and it was only in issue #7 when writer-artist Wally Wood came up with the familiar red costume. In keeping with the chosen narrative device, writers Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale retell Daredevil's origins in a deliberate, almost languid fashion, as character-driven as Frank Miller's series was. Evidently, they have succeed.